Introduction to the LME

Transcription

Introduction to the LME
Introduction to the LME
Presented by Catherine Markey
Head of Education and Marketing
3 December 2012, Hong Kong
1
Course objectives
History, purpose and workings of the London Metal Exchange
You will learn about
•
Who uses the LME and why
•
Pricing – how the global LME price is used in physical metal trading
•
Hedging – how LME products are used in price risk management
•
Delivery – metal brands, warrants and warehouses
•
Trading and terminology
•
Prompt date structure and official prices
•
Membership and the role of the broker
•
Clearing
2
LME overview
3
The LME – the world’s premier metal exchange
In 2011
•146 million lots traded
•3.5 billion tonnes of metal
•$15.4 trillion notional value
•Record high of 3 million lots open interest
4
LME market share
LME Market Share
95%
90%
85%
80%
75%
70%
65%
60%
55%
N.B. Drop in LME market share in 2010 reflects increase in SHFE zinc volumes
5
Oct-12
Jul-12
Apr-12
Jan-12
Oct-11
Jul-11
Apr-11
Jan-11
Oct-10
Jul-10
Apr-10
Jan-10
Oct-09
Jul-09
Apr-09
Jan-09
Oct-08
Jul-08
Apr-08
Jan-08
50%
LME market share
LME
SHFE
CME (COMEX)
OTHER
1.40
1.20
Billion tonnes
1.00
0.80
0.60
0.40
0.20
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3
2007
6
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
LME market share – open interest (number
of open contracts)
LME accounts for at least 93% of global Exchange open interest in Oct
2012 (tonnes).
120%
100%
80%
Aluminium
60%
Copper
Zinc
40%
20%
7
Jul-12
Apr-12
Jan-12
Oct-11
Jul-11
Apr-11
Jan-11
Oct-10
Jul-10
Apr-10
Jan-10
Oct-09
Jul-09
Apr-09
Jan-09
Oct-08
Jul-08
Apr-08
Jan-08
0%
LME contracts
1877
1877
LME Copper
1979
LME Nickel
2006
LMEminis
8
1920
LME Lead
LME Tin
1992
LME Steel
Billet
LME Zinc
LME Aluminium
2002
2000
LME Aluminium
Alloy
2008
1978
1920
LMEX
2010
LME
Molybdenum
LME NASAAC
2010
LME Cobalt
LME volumes 2001 - 2012
180
Tin, Lead, NASAAC, Al Alloy, Plastics, Steel, Minor metals, minis and LME Swaps
Nickel
Zinc
Copper
Aluminium
160
140
Lots (millions)
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
Year
9
2008
2009
2010
2011
Jan-Oct
2012
LME average daily turnover
Average daily LME turnover
700,000
UP 8%
600,000
500,000
Lots
400,000
300,000
200,000
100,000
0
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 JanOct
2012
10
Who trades in the physical market?
•
Material at any stage of production
•
Market participants
– Producers / smelters
– Traders
– Converters / fabricators
– Merchants / distributors
– End users
11
Who trades on the LME?
•
Material at semi-converted stage
•
Market participants
– Members
– Traders/speculators
– Investment funds
– Producers/smelters
– Converters/fabricators
– Merchants/distributors
– End Users
12
Speculators
•
Who are the speculators?
– Technical funds/Algos/HFTs: momentum strategies (1 lot
trades)
– Hedge funds: exploit price anomalies
– Passive investors: buy and hold
– Market-makers: buy low, sell high
– FCMs (Futures commission merchant)
– CTAs (Commodity Trade Advisers)
– CPOs (Commodity Pool Operators)
•
Most investors pursue strategies that have a neutral or countercyclical impact on prices i.e. they buy when they perceive the price
to be lower than fair value and sell when it is above fair value.
13
Primary services of the LME
Pricing
Hedging
14
Primary Role of LME
Delivery
LME Pricing
15
LME pricing
LME prices have to reflect the material activities of the
market
Advantages:
– Unique price set by supply and demand
– Transparent
– Traded and tradable real-time prices
– Heavily regulated market
– More accurate hedging
16
LME published prices
Pricing basis – in warehouse, duty unpaid
•
Asian Benchmark
- published 07.30 GMT (08.30 BST)
Official Prices
– prices from the 2nd Ring close
– cash, 3 months, & three forward December prompts
Settlement Price
– official “Cash” seller’s price
Closing Prices
– referred to as “evening evaluations” established at 5pm
– used by LCH for daily margining purposes
– used by members for risk management
•
•
•
17
What does the LME price represent?
The LME price represents material:
•
From an LME-registered brand
•
Stored in an LME-approved warehouse
•
Duty unpaid
•
Buyer to pay for delivery out of warehouse
18
The metals value chain
How to use an LME price
LME price
minus
discount
Mining
Concentration
LME price
minus
discount
Smelting
Low Metal
Content
Refining
Metal Products
Semi
Fabricated
Products
Cathode
Wire
Rebar
Cans
Billet
Ingot
19
LME price plus
production costs
and profit
margin
LME price
LME traded and cleared currencies
LME contracts trade in US Dollars
LME contracts can also be cleared in the following currencies:
Euro
20
GB Sterling
Japanese Yen
Prompt date structure
21
Prompt dates
The LME has a unique prompt date structure
All products:
• Daily from cash to 3 months
• Then weekly from 3 months to 6 months (every Wednesday)
• Then monthly from 7 months (every third Wednesday)
• Aluminium and copper contracts trade out to 10 years
22
Prompt dates
•The prompt date structure reflects needs of physical industry
•May need to hedge for a specific date to match arrival of shipment
•Ability to move the prompt date by a few days or weeks necessary when
shipments are delayed so the date of pricing is delayed
•Aluminium and copper contracts trade out to 10 years
•Long term prompt dates used to hedge forward production particularly for new
mining projects
23
Rolling prompt dates
•
Cash – Two business days from today
•
Tom – Tomorrow’s date
•
3 months – 3 calendar months from today
24
LME contracts
25
What is a futures contract?
A future is an agreement to buy or sell a
standard
quantity
standard
quantity
on a fixed date at a
26
of a
specified
asset
(material)
specified
asset
(material)
price agreed today
LME traded options contracts
“The purchase of an option gives the buyer (of the option)
the right but not the obligation to buy or sell
an underlying futures contract for a fixed delivery date
at a fixed price”
27
LME Options and TAPOs
•
Traded options declare on the first Wednesday of the month and result in a
futures position for the third Wednesday of the month
•
TAPOS are Asian-style options
•
‘Strike Price’ settled for differences against the MASP (Monthly Average
Settlement Price)
28
LMEswaps
•
Financially settled contract
•
Buyer of LMEswaps fixes the purchase price and closes this purchase
at the Monthly Average Settlement Price (MASP). Cash difference is
paid the second business day of the next month
•
Seller fixes the sale price and close this sale at the MASP. Cash
difference is paid the second business day of the next month
•
MASP is floating price
•
Used by physical industry to hedge price risk on ‘unknown’ LME
formula monthly price agreements
29
Monthly physical pricing
Typical pricing formulae:
•
M – 1 (pricing month before month of shipment)
•
M
•
M+1 (pricing month after month of shipment)
•
Eg. Producer sells 5,000 mt copper to consumer @ LME M-1
shipment in June 2013. Price would be MASP for May
30
(pricing month of shipment)
LMEminis
•
Monthly and cash settled contracts which can be easily traded
outside the open outcry environment
•
LME Copper, LME Aluminium and LME Zinc 5-tonne futures
contracts, tradable up to 12 months forward
•
Telephone and LMEselect only
31
Settlement on prompt date
•
LME contracts are forward contracts
•
Can be settled financially or by delivery of warehouse warrants
•
Realised profits and losses only settled on prompt date
•
Only LMEminis are cash settled daily
•
Brokers may give credit to finance margins
32
Settlement of LME contracts
Settlement on prompt date (or expiry date) by:
•
Financial settlement of futures contract
– Buy / sell an equal and opposite position
and / or
•
Delivery
– Using LME Warrants, the method by which LME contracts are
delivered
– Settlement price is discovered two days before the prompt
date (two days before Cash)
33
The forward curve
34
Forward prices
•
Forward prices
the prices being quoted for delivery dates beyond the cash prices
•
Contango
nearby price of material is lower than the forward price
•
Backwardation
nearby price of material is higher than the forward price
35
Forward price - contango
P
R
I
C
E
t
1
2
Forward dates
36
3
Effect of stocks on contango
•
Cash to 3 months maximum contango is $66.00
•
Maximum contango calculated as cost to finance and store metal
•
Stocks are falling
•
Demand rising for nearby delivery
•
Contango depreciates according to nearby demand
•
When Cash and 3 months are the same the forward curve is level
37
Forward price - backwardation
P
R
I
C
E
t
1
2
Forward dates
38
3
LME market price structure
39
CASH
$2,000
1 MONTH
$1,990
2 MONTHS
$1,995
3 MONTHS
$2,010
Moving positions
40
LME trading - Carries
Borrow
Time
Buy nearby
Sell forward
Lend
Time
Sell nearby
41
Buy forward
Hedging
42
What is hedging?
Hedging
Establishing a position in a commodity futures market (LME) which is
equal and opposite to a transaction made on a physical market.
– Protects against adverse price movements
– Locks in an agreed profit margin
– Protects inventory value
43
Hedging is addressing Risk Positions
•
A RISK position is one that has an uncertain outcome, a position
which may make or lose money depending on market movements
•
It is a purchase not yet matched with a sale or a sale not yet
matched with a purchase
•
A LONG position will make a profit if the price goes up; a loss if the
price goes down
•
A SHORT position will make a profit if the price goes down; a loss if
the price goes up
•
If you are SQUARE, you will not be affected by market movements
but you may still have basis risk
44
Hedger vs speculator
•
A hedger starts with a price exposure, buys or sells futures contracts,
and therefore offsets the price exposure.
•
A speculator starts without price exposure, buys or sells futures
contracts, and takes on price exposure
45
Hedgers
•
Who are the hedgers?
– Mining companies locking in a sale price
– Manufacturers who want to lock in raw material costs
– End use consumers who want to lock in known costs
– Merchants who wish to hedge inventory
•
Hedging replaces an unknown price with a known price
46
Market data
47
LME data via licensed distributors
•
Real time data
– 24 hours per day
– coverage will vary between distributors
•
Delayed data
– 30 minutes delayed data at a reduced fee
•
Next Day data
– published after midnight UK time
•
Historical data
– some distributors provide this service
48
LME direct data
•
Historical data
– the Exchange offers this service via the LME Online Store
•
LME website data (free of charge)
– daily stocks and price for metals
– daily index value
– selection of market reports
– monthly average prices and volumes
– graphing tool for chart pricing
– one or two days delayed
49
Vendor and subscriber statistics
•
Over 90 authorised vendors worldwide
•
38,000 users worldwide
•
Over 24,000 real-time terminals worldwide:
50 % Europe, Middle East & Africa
30 % North America, Latin America
20 % Asia
•
Over 13,000 users receiving “30 minute delayed data” worldwide
•
Countless users of “next day data” (www.lme.com)
•
Vendors include:
a) leading global data aggregators (Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, etc)
b) information providers specialising in metals news and prices
(Fastmarkets, Metalprices.com etc)
50
LME warehousing &
fundamentals of delivery
51
LME delivery: why?
Helps price
convergence
between
futures/physical
Price convergence
instills credibility in
the LME price
Why the need
for delivery
Serves industry in times
of over/under supply
52
LME delivery is not
designed to replace
current supply mechanism
but to support it
Price convergence
Futures Price
Spot Physical Price
53
LME role in storage
LME does NOT
buy or sell
physical material
LME does NOT
own storage facilities
LME APPROVES
locations and
storage facilities
LME does NOT
own transportation
operations
54
LME does NOT
set rates for rents
and handling
Warehouse locations
Over 700 storage facilities listed by the LME
1. Antwerp, Belgium
2. Bremen, Germany
3. Hamburg, Germany
4. Genoa, Italy
5. Leghorn, Italy
6. Ravenna, Italy
7. Trieste, Italy
8. Rotterdam, Netherlands
9. Vlissingen, Netherlands
1. Baltimore, Maryland
2. Chicago, Illinois
3. Detroit, Michigan
4. Long Beach, California
5. Los Angeles, California
6. Louisville, Kentucky
7. Mobile, Alabama
8. New Orleans, Louisiana
9. Owensboro, Kentucky
10. St. Louis, Missouri
11. Toledo, Ohio
55
10. Barcelona, Spain
11. Bilbao, Spain
12. Helsingborg, Sweden
13. Hull, UK
14. Liverpool, UK
15. Tyne & Wear, UK
1. Busan, South Korea
2. Gwangyang, South Korea
3. Incheon, South Korea
1. Nagoya, Japan
2. Yokohama, Japan
1.
2.
3.
Dubai, UAE
Kocaeli, Turkey
Tekirdhag, Turkey
1. Johor, Malaysia
2. Singapore
3. Port Klang, Malaysia
LME location approval process
Safe and
well managed
Net consumption area
or gateway
Location
approval
Logistically sound
conduit for the passage
of material
56
Politically
economically
fiscally stable
Warehouse companies approval
Warehouse:
size, quality, capacity and
operation of the building
must be suitable
Warehouse company:
well established and
experienced in handling
relevant material
Listed
warehouses
Facilities:
weighing, strapping,
cranes and forklifts
regularly inspected
57
Good access to road, rail
and water where required
How does the LME regulate approved
warehouses?
Regular inspections
Sets load out rates for warehouses
Currently:
More than 900,000 mt capacity must deliver out minimum 3,000mt daily per
warehouse company per location
600,000 – 900,000mt capacity must deliver out minimum 2,500mt daily per
warehouse company per location
300,000 – 600,000 mt capacity must deliver out minimum 2,000mt daily per
warehouse company per location
Less than 300,000mt capacity must deliver out minimum 1,500mt daily per
warehouse company per location
From April 2013, additional load out of minimum 60mt of tin and nickel
58
Metal Financing
After global financial crisis high counterparty risk led to unwillingness to offer
credit
Banks had access to cheap money
Borrowing metal (buying now and agreeing to deliver back later) has a
guaranteed return often in excess of interest rates
Metal bought and placed in warehouse for anything up to three years
Metal is ‘locked up’ and unavailable for purchase on LME
59
The maximum contango LME Aluminium
Cash to 3 months
Cash price
Cost to finance
Warehouse rent
Insurance
3 month price
+
+
+
$1820.00
$ 23.50 @ 40 cents/day
$ 34.20
$
3.00
$1880.70
What if warehouse rents were to fall to 30 cents/day?
60
LME delivery and LMEsword
Delivery of LME futures contracts is satisfied by delivery of
LME warrants
– LME warrants are bearer documents of possession relating to one
specified lot of material in warehouse
– Delivery is made through the transfer of warrants from seller to
buyer
– LME warrants transferred through electronic transfer system –
LMEsword
– Secondary market in LME warrants
• location & brand premiums
61
LMEsword system
Warehouse
Warehouse
Agent
LCH.Clearnet
LMEsword
Warrant
Owner
LME
LMEsword Member
Original
Owner
= LMEsword Electronic Connection
= Other Instruction or Data Transfer
62
Depository
Taking metal off warrant
Removal of LME warrant
from depository
1. The LME warrant is collected from
depository and delivered to the London
Agent together with cancellation
instructions and details for the material
release.
Cancellation of LME warrant
2. The London agent cancels the LME
warrant in LMEsword. Notification of
cancellation sent to the warehouse
company to release material.
Cancellation of the warrant is
completed and no longer deliverable on
exchange.
Await release instructions
Removal of material
3. Upon receipt of release instructions, the
warehouse company will allow material
to leave once all outstanding charges
are paid.
4. Material is delivered out and the LME
warrant is removed from LMEsword.
63
Trading at the LME
64
Trading on the LME
• No position limits
• No price limits
• There is always a price, 24 hours a day
• Access through LME member companies
65
LME trading platforms
Ring trading (11.40 – 17.00)
Telephone trading (24 hours)
Electronic trading (01.00 – 19.00)
(Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, China,
Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland, UK &
USA)
66
The Ring
67
The Ring
Trader
68
•
The only individual from the
team who can transact within
the Ring
•
This individual will be seated on
the red seats in the Ring
The Ring
Clerks
69
•
Usually two individuals per
team who provide
communication in and out of
the Ring.
•
One will be using hand signals
to indicate what price is
currently trading, while the
other will be recording
transactions.
The Ring
Telephone clerks
A number of team members
who utilise telephones to either
receive orders from large clients, or
provide a commentary back to
their offices in London & overseas
offices.
70
A futures contract in practice
Producer
Consumer
Physical Transaction
“Paper” Transaction
Client
Broker
Client
Broker
“Paper” Transaction
Broker
Client
Broker
Client
LME
Client
Broker
Ring Trading
LME Select
Interoffice
LMEsmart
Clearing House
71
The growth in electronic trading
72
LME electronic trading – LMEselect
Up 17% y/y
73
LME Asian trading on LMEselect
Average daily volume up 9% y/y
* Select: 00:00-7:00am UK, client and exchange, 3-month outrights
74
Overview of LME clearing
75
Role of clearing
•
LME currently clears through LCH.Clearnet
•
LME Clear will launch 2014
•
The main purpose of the self clearing project is to provide the LME
with its own, independent clearing capability and more easily
launch new contracts.
•
Manager of counterparty risk to clearing members
•
Settlement and delivery of warrants
•
Management of credit risk
76
How clearing works
Futures contracts without clearing
Broker Y sells 1000 tonnes to broker Z @ $5000
Y
Z
Futures contracts with clearing
Y sells to LCH.Clearnet
1000 tonnes @ $5000
Y
77
LCH.Clearnet sells to Z
1000 tonnes @ $5000
LCH.Clearnet
Z
Role of risk – Margin deposits
•
The clearing house takes security to protect against a clearing
member unable to pay its losses
•
Two elements:
– Initial margin
– Variation margin
78
Initial margin
•
Returnable deposit in respect of net open positions
•
Calculated using London SPAN
•
Initial margin payable using cash or acceptable collateral (bank
guarantee, letter of credit, warehouse warrants etc.)
•
Rates set by the Risk Management department in consultation with
the LME
79
Initial margin calculation
•
•
Client A sells 1000mt LME Copper prompt 3 months.
Initial margin rates for LME Copper are as follows:
Scanning range
LME Copper
$ per mt
$ per lot
580
14,500
Initial margin payment
Initial margin payment for this transaction would be as follows:
$14,500 x 40 lots = $580,000
80
Variation margin calculation
Client A Sells 1000mt 3 month Cu @ $8,000mt
Mark to market
Variation margin
Variation margin to be paid
81
@ $8,053
= $53 x 25 x 40
= $53,000
The role of an LME broker/dealer
82
The role of an LME broker/dealer
The broker/dealer
•
Provides its clients with access to the market
– acts as broker, i.e. intermediary
Trades
– for its own account (dual capacity) with
•
• Clients
• Other market members
•
Provides liquidity to clients and the market
83
LME client contracts
•
Clients have contracts with the broker – not the Exchange or
LCH.Clearnet or any other member
•
Responsibility of the client to make final decision on how to trade,
although broker will advise
•
Broker responsible for contract performance and assumes the risk
on the client
•
Client is buying or selling from the broker and not the market or
another member firm.
84
LME client contracts
•
It is at the broker’s discretion whether he fills the order:
– From his proprietary trading book
– Cross it with opposite order from another client
– Put it into the market to seek other bids and offers
•
The broker is acting in a ‘dual capacity’
85
Regulation and membership
86
UK regulation introduced in 1988
Parliament (HM Treasury)
Serious Fraud
Office
Office of Fair
Trading
FSA
(including banking
supervision)
LCH.Clearnet
London Metal Exchange
LME Members
87
Future UK Regulatory Environment
Bank of England
Financial Conduct
Authority
(FSA renamed
to FCA)
Prudential
Regulation
Authority
(PRA)
Clearing Houses
Exchanges
88
Authorised firms
Regulation of LME members
•
LME members providing investment services to customers are
regulated under the FSMA 2000 and:
– Must be authorised by FSA
– Staff giving investment advice must be registered with FSA
– Company must comply with regulatory capital rules
– Company must comply with conduct of business rules
•
LME members are required to comply with all LME rules including
market conduct
•
LME members must maintain proper records
89
LME membership trading categories
Description
Can Issue LME
Contracts
Authorised
Member of Trading Rights
(Financial
LCH for Metals
Services Act)
May Solicit
Brokerage
Minimum Net
Worth
Requirement
Annual
Subscription
£55,000
1. Ring
Dealing
Member
Yes
Yes
Yes
Freely
Yes
£5mm
2. Associate
Broker
Clearing
Member
Yes
Yes
Yes
Freely
Yes
£5mm
No
£2.5m
£19,000
£5mm
£45,000
£50.000
£1.250
3. Associate
Trade
Clearing
Member
No
No
Yes
May only deal
with 1, 2 or 4,
not with each
other
4. Associate
Broker
Member
Yes
Yes
No
Freely
Yes
5. Associate
Trade
Member
No
No
No
Only 1, 2 or 4
No
90
£55,000
LME member default provisions
•
Companies Act has unique provisions for Exchange-traded
contracts
•
LME and LCH.Clearnet act ahead of liquidator
– LCH.Clearnet manages Exchange Contracts
– LME manages Client Contracts
• Client Contracts closed out at market price
• Profits and losses netted
• Positions transferred to other brokers
•
These provisions do not apply to OTC contracts
91
What’s next for LME Asia
92
LME developments in Asia
•
LME Asia office opened in Singapore March 2010
•
28 member companies now have trading operations in Singapore
or Hong Kong
•
Growth of Chinese trading on international exchanges including
the LME expected to continue
•
Further applications to list metal from Chinese producers
•
Subject to regulatory approval, LME anticipating more Chinese
banks or brokerage firms to become LME members (currently BOCI)
93
Disclaimer
The information contained within this presentation is for illustrative
and educational purposes only and should not be relied upon in
making any investment decision. Whilst every effort has been made to
ensure the information is up-to-date and correct, the LME cannot
guarantee that it is completely accurate and free from human error.
94

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